> Hello, > > John Bambenek <jcb=40bambenekconsulting....@dmarc.ietf.org> > wrote: > >> All whois data is PII, in the case where people register > >> individual details, as opposed to organizational roles. I think > >> you may need to do a bit more research on this topic, you seem to > >> have misunderstood a thing or two. > > > You could set contact info to "Mail Administrator" and > > "ab...@domain.com" and that's fine here. > > This does not eliminate the GDPR concerns when people fail to do > this. How so? > > > If you put personal information, that's your choice. If you put > > role-based info, that's your choice. > > You can't have it both ways. Elsewhere in this thread you suggest > that people will be coerced into providing this data, because > otherwise their e-mail won't get delivered. Sorry, but nope.
I cannot coerce anything. I represent nothing that represents even a molecule of the network to coerce or enforce anything. I hope incentives will be created, and those may be purely positive incentives (mails more likely to be delivered, etc). To put your argument in another way, I as someone who protects uses should NOT have information with which I could potentially reliably block malicious individuals could be another way to frame your position. That's a position. > > Thanks for all the fish, > - Bjarni > _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop